Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 7 October 1946 — Page 14

Tq Indianapolis Times GE 14 Monday, Oct. 7, 1046 ODWARD WALTER LECKRONE HENRY W. MANZ a Editor Si Business Manager SCRIPPS-HOWARD NEWSPAPER Owned and published daily (except Sunday) by

Indianapolis Times Publishing Co. 214 W. Maryland st. Postal Zone 9. + Member of United Press, Scripps-Howard Néwspaper Alliance, NEA Service, and Audit Bureau of

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ered by carrier, 20 cents a week. - - sae Mail rates in Indiana, $6 a year; all other states, 0. 8. possessions, Canada and Mexico, 87 cents a

month. Ge R1-5551 SPEED KING BACK in 1903 at this season a young fellow named Barney Oldfield stole the headlines from baseball's first world series, in which the Boston Americans were beating the Pittsburgh Nationals. He broke all records by driving an automobile 15 miles in 1415 minutes on the old Indiana state fair grounds track. Barney died Friday in Beverly Hills, Cal. He was 69 years old, and he had almost outlived the memory of his daredevil glory as king of the dirt tracks. But for a good many years his name stood for speed in the American vocabulary, and the chunky, cigar-chewing race driver was one of our national heroes. Looking back at it now, his 1903 record—only a little better than a mile a mifiute—may not appear startling. But, like the first tiny hop of the Wright brothers’ flying machine a few weeks later in the same year, it was a forecast, perhaps a warning, of what was to come. The whole world seems to travel nowadays a great deal faster than Barney Oldfield did 43 years ago. It would be reassuring to feel that the sense of direction is as sure, the hands on the steering wheel as firm, as his used to be.

MAINTAINING PEACE HE frank declaration by Secretary Forrestal that Unit- | ed States naval forces are in the Mediterranean and eastern Atlantic to support American foreign policy should discourage acts of aggression in the Russian-Turkish controversy over control of the Dardanelles, or at Trieste, where the Yugoslavs and Italians are in dispute. In claiming the right to join with Turkey in “joint defense” measures at the Dardanelles, Russia is ignoring the existence of the United Nations security council, and | in fact is demanding that Turkey surrender her sovereignty | and enter the Russian orbit as another captive state. No threat exists to the Dardanelles, so-why the talk of “de- | fense measures?”

ation when Hitler made his original demands upon Czecho- | slovakia. A firm attitude by the western democracies at

Munich might have prevented world war 11. . » ».

= ¥ » HE presumption is that the United States and Britain | will reiterate their previous support of the Turkish po- i gition when, on Aug. 19, Moscow was informed that the | Russian proposal to share control of the straits with Turkey | did not meet with U. 8. and British approval. Meanwhile, presence of American and British naval units in the Mediterranean should curb any disposition to resolve the issue by force. : Inability to reach an agreement at the Paris peace’

thrown this problem back into the lap of the council of foreign ministers. Possibly that is where the statute should have been drafted in the first instance, since there was no apparent prospect of harmonizing the highly and inflamed Yugoslav and Italian viewpoints when those nations were invited into the discussion. Pending a decision by the Big Four ministers, however, it is essential that order be maintained in the contested area. It would be a body blow to the whole theory of the United Nations if the bullying tactics of the Yugoslavs ghould prevail now, while lawful processes are stalemated. Until the United Nations has a police force to enforce order in such situations, it is incumbent upon the nations supporting United Nations principles-to supply the deficiency.

GEORGIA LYNCHERS STILL FREE EORGIA’'S Governor Ellis Arnall seems to have lost interest in catching the mobsters who murdered four Negroes in that state's Walton county more than two months ago. Edward B. Smith, a Scripps-Howard staff writer, reports from Georgia that state and local authorities apparently have suspendéd all efforts to solve the crime. The head of the Georgia bureau of investigation has not been in Walton county for several weeks. formerly stationed in the county, has been sent elsewhere. The sheriff says frankly that he is not” working on the case, and the local state prosecutor is busy with other matters. Agents from the FBI are still on the job. But they are

the county’s people who, according to Mr. Smith, are “fed up” with unfavorable publicity and don’t want to talk about the murders. Just after the four Negroes were killed, on July 25, Governor Arnall professed deep concern. He promised to employ the state's full resources to capture the lynchers and offered rewards for information leading to their con—viction. But this week Reporter Smith was told that the governor was too'busy to talk with him about the Walton county outrage.

Gene Talmadge, who will become governor in January.

THE AIR FORCES LEAD OFF

Mustangs will go to Alaska for Arctic training.

been too prone in the past to do their peacetime trainin within easy access to the bathing beaches, polo fields an

JOWARD | Give Light and the People Wili Find Ther, Own Way | :

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JAMES WHITCOMB RILEY was the durndest feller to fool people. For at least 13 years—f{rom 1870 to 1883 — he used fancy pseudonyms to hide his

identity. 4 . Riley's first pen name of which there is a was Edyrn. Sounds like something that cdme to him by way of a dream. It didn’t. Edyrn was a character in Tennyson's “The 1dylls of the King.” Apparently, Riley liked the sound of the name well enough to appropriate it as his own; with the result that when it came time to publish “A Backward Look” in The Greenfield - Commercial on Aug. 7, 1870, everybody blinked his eyes to figure out who Edyrn might be. So far as anybody knows, it was Riley's first poem to appear in print. Subsequently several more poems appeared with the same pseudonym, As a matter of fact, thé Tennyson alias was good for two years. By that time people began to catch on. Either that, or Mr. Riley was tired of his assumed name. Maybe, too, he thought it time to fool people some more. Anyway, in 1872 he chucked the romantic signature in favor of Jay Whit. When in‘a hurry, he abbreviated it to read J. Whit. These pen names lasted six or seven years.

Used Several Pen-Names

BY THIS TIME, the situation was complicated still more by the occasional appearance of poems by J. W. Riley—sometimes right along with those of Jay Whit. This sort ot fooling irritated Benjamin S. Parker no end. Mr. Parker wag one of Mr. Riley's best friends and one of the #€fy first to realize the boy's talent. Finally, in 1879, Mr. Parker's irritation took the shape of a critical piece in The Mercury. “We wish softly, but firmly to suggest to Riley,” sald Mr. Parker, “that certain tricks which the public is beginning to understand, by which he seeks to give

record

Hoosier Forum

"When Living Cost Threatens Existence, Anything Can Happen”

By J. E. O'Brien, Franklin

| is a sucker for dams. { admiration for the builder

"| do not agres with a word that you say, but | will defend to the death your right to say it." — Voltaire.

awhile, He said certainly and | started mixing something up. My, | friend asked him if it would be al-| right to pay him Saturday as she was broke at the time. The good doctor stopped doing what he was]

Your Sept. 27 editorial, “Private Right vs. Public Wrong,” bears, in|doing and bluntly informed her that | many respects, thoughts that I have had since Mr. Whitney's trainmen unless she could pay for the medi- |

tied up the railroads of .our country. However, if you w

b Coat iro 3 say that you have failed to take into consideration one very important | chance of getting it. The world was presented with a not dissimilar situa- |. mainly, the cost of living and an alternative for these men.

ill permit, may I|cine right then there wasn't any My friend. | left the

having no other choice,

At present, I am thankful to say that’ the cost of living doesn't place quite upset and .still paining.|

cause me any great degree of anxiety. Therefore, I feel with a fair degree of authority on.the subject.

1 believe that the men involved

that I can speak| 71t isn't any business of mine how |

the medical man handles his busi-| I ribs but 1 do believe it is quite un-|

in the Pittsburgh power strike, and men who have been active in other such strikes, ‘as well, are as much, if not more, concerned with the affairs of our country as any good American, should be. I believe that] these men don't like.to see innocent | residents of a city, no less their own | families, suffer as the result of action by any individual group, big or small. But, when a series. of in- on cidents threatening the comfortable The agriculture existence of these men transpire,

aren't always as rational as one| Would expect. x {the weather. Plainly stated, gentlemen, when new wet and the cost of living rises to a height]

|

antagonistic (which threatens this man's normal| Some Slav diplomats seem to have ,p; existence, then anything that labor heen trained in the Molotov school | J eh ] goUa keep oi,

leaders say sounds good, and maybe of bad manners a lit should. 2 = | Let us take some of the current | prices on items which are necessary | {to this man's existence. Since 1942, |ehiekens have jumped in price from |" |35 to 75 cents per pound; beef cuts | “1rrespo {have jumped 1007 in price; butter, | 11507; eggs, 100%; bacon and other | |products, 100%; clothing 100 to | 200% ; home furnishings, 50 to 100%; many non-essential, but highly desirable items, 50 to 200%.

press for sibility.” Certainly {lenge Elliott as nsibility.” ” 8 Everyone liked

| named Ickes,

VIEWS ON THE NEWS

By DANIEL M. KIDNEY A «Communist who is against a strike is as hard to find as a meat| packer who is for OPA. mind be 3 2000 doctor?

| nounced it has discontinued its meat

conference on a statute for the government of Trieste has |anxiety sets in and their actions | DoArd. So has 8lMost everyohe else

Scientists say we soon can control Probably result in a dry fight. = n »

Elliott Roosevelt condemns “freedom of

an authority on

of Secretary of Commerce Harriman | except Harold Ickes. His idea of an| ideal cabinet official

human to turn a person down just ‘because that person doesn't have, the money to pay for the medicine at the immediate moment. I would | like to know just why this doctor lis in the medicine business if it isn't to help people. How can a {man with nothing but money on his

4 » - » “LIFE AS IT GOES ON IN OUR INDIANAPOLIS” By J. E. H.,, Indianapolis 8 Here's a letter home. Dear Pa and Ma: Well here I am in the big city and it sure is big like you said it where. The only thing that hurts is these shoes Like you said Pa, I got a good job right away. Make $1.25 an hour. More the | 1D2D I made in a week .at home. jrrespon- [1D getting plenty to eat here, all 10 one eas chal the beans and corn-bread you want. Seems like there is a feller named {OPA around that people are right 4 mad at over meat. {fit to be tied. Looks like feuding Whe appointment will start anytime now. Speaking of feuding, couple folks got kilt a couple weeks back. So far the revenuers haven't been able to catch 'em. I don’t think they want

» department an-

t Moscow. ”

is. a fellow |

Wages have not risen proportion |

ately, or even to point which will and prices leads to eventual ruina-|dp is ride round fn their big fancy

to catch them. Seems like all they

guarantee to” these men the mode tion of all concerned; inflation, de-|automobiles.

of living which they knew; not even pression, hard times for all. too great a task for labor and in-| ? should see them here. My oh my. some- | dustry both to accept a little less, | they do drive fast, thirty miles an

la fair compromise. | © Therefore, we agree that thing should be done to limit the labor unions from abusing the privilege of collective bargaining. Are we going to do this and thus tie the hands of the individual worker! the other guy without first setting an effective] | limit for industry as well, though? | With adequate | Personally, I am opposed to the violation. fuse of “limits” until all other

at present and ha

One of his assistants, | American methods of regulatiori| "DOCTORS SHOULD AID ' have been exhausted. Has labor and | EVEN IF CAN'T PAY" industry ever combined to work for By M. R. Indianapolis.

{the economic security of the coun-|

» ” ”

Is it| speaking of automobiles, you

ve it last longer?

hour. I bought myself one and I

Or would they rather be greedy now : . got right in the middle of the road] BAN joie BN ir De ant] Sn heallana drove all of 15 miles an hour.| en ' ay s well gel IL, | py you should see the fancy streets) There's the guy to set limits for—

i 1 don’t." ore. All smooth as glass. No

Yor | bumps at all. Sure must cost lots of | money to keep them that way. Don't seé why they should waste so much time on them. Ma, I been and seen Aunt Roxie, Unkle Cal, cousins Bob, Jim, John, Ceéil and Jean. They are all fine.

punishments

A good friend of mine was in Want you and Pa to come up and

|try. without intervention from gov-|great pain the other day and went |, 0 with them

| ernment sources? No—even though to see a medical

[they realize that this is the only|to his place of r | successful solution. I'm sure that |him what the

handicapped by the unco-operative if not hostile attitude of |labor and industry will both agree asked if he could fix her up with

ething to elim

Arsen

{that the end result of rising wages som | ——

1 |

Side Glances—By Galbraith

doctor. She went esidence and told trouble was and

Well, I must close and get back to work. » n » “TECH MAKES MISTAKE ON. G. 1S SOCIAL LIFE”

inate the pain for

|By Mrs. William Lynch, 1507 N. Kealing|

ave,

1 am not. a veteran nor do I have daughters in high school. I think

«I have just an average viewpoint

They are -supe-

on how the veterans are being treat-

ed at one of our local high schools. 1 am an alumna of this school and I have always been rather proud of it until .now. Why should these boys be singled out and treated

: ‘If Georgia's state government does nothing to find and punish the perpetrators of that brutal crime before the “liberal” Governor Arnall’'s term ends, there is no hope that it will do anything under the far-from-liberal demagog,

THE army air forces move one up on the ground forces and the navy, with announcement by Gen, Carl Spaatz that a group of B-29 Superfortresses and a squadron of P-51

; The chief of the army air forces said in a recent speech ‘that the United States was wide open to an air attack across the polar ice-cap and training for combat under arctic conditions was sound insurance against such an attack. That this training is to be carried on during the most rugged season in the Far North also reflects realistic thinking. If has seemed to us that the two older services have

cocktail lounges, ignoring the hard facts of modern warfare. ay's t is from across the top of the globe, not Texas or Hawaii. Hats off to Gen. Spaatz

2 d

’ GOR. 946 BY WA SERVIE. We. TM REC SPAT. OFF,

"| hope they keep that ator crackihg stuff a secr —I ve got enough chemistry and physics to hand

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different from other students, Certainly if they were the type of questionable character, they would not be making the effort to complete {an interrupted education. It seems to me with all the other difficulties G. 1's are facing—housing,

himself notoriety, must now be abandoned. He has ! the elements of the true poet in him. He has been very

POLITICAL REPORT . . . By Thomas L. Stokes

OUR TOW N...8y “Anton Scherrer Riley Always Liked to

Riley would have*mended his ways. To a certain extent he did. He dropped thé pen name of Jay and adopted that of John C Walker, 1879, the Saturday Herald published & poem abel

ly

Fool Public |

successful in illuminating them and has ‘made an excellent start. Now he must depend upon the merits of what he produces to sustain and increase the réputation alreddy achieved. Tricks and subtérfuge will hve him no longer and he must turn his back upon them.” ¢

After such a public spanking you'd think that

‘Hope.” It was the four-stanza emotionally steeped

affair with the unforgetable line: “My fate is fanged with frost and tongued with flame.” Reed, the preacher over at the First Presbyterian church, ran across that poem, he publicly announced: “There is only one genius who could write that line and he was born in Greenfield.”

‘James Hoosier Riley’

When Myron

MYRON REED'S SHREWD conjecture didn't em-

barrass Mr. Riley in the least. He went right on using the*pen name of John C. Walker. As a matter of fact, it wasn't until 1882 that he dropped it. Next he turned up as “Ben. F. Johnson 6f Boone” and again everybody was fooled. They stayed fooled until 1883, the year Riley's first book of collected poems appeared. It was Poems.” Then, but not until then, did people know for sure who Benj. Johnson was. After that Riley's poems appeared under his real name.

“The Old Swimmin' Hole and 'Leven More

Up until the very last, however, Riley tried to fool people. When he couldn't sign his poems with

pseudonyms any more, he tried to fool them with

letters. To throw people off the track he signed his letters with all sort of fancy names such as Marigold, for instance, and Brother Whittleford, Uncle Sidney,

Troubled Tom, The Bad Haroun and Old E. Z. Mark.

Indeed, on one occasion when he was obliged to answer Edward Bok’s request for a poem for The Ladies’ Home Journal, Riley signed his letter: “James Hoosier Riley, the Whitcomb Poet.” Brought up as he was in PRludelphi, Mr. Bok couldn't appreciate the joke at all

Water Power Helps Build Northwest

SPOKANE, Oct. T.—To put it plainly, this traveler We all are, no doubt. It’s our

No tour of our country is complete without a pilgrimage to our grandest monument in concrete, Grand

| Coulee dam, which throws itself athwart the Columbia

river about 100 miles from here.

Aids Irrigation System

NEARLY A DECADE AGO this traveler had one of his greatest thrills when he first looked upon it. Then it was only partly complete, but the vision was all there, like thé rough sketch in charcoal, one of the noblest conceptions of a nation of builders. It was not the first, of course. TVA in Tennessee, and Boulder in Colorado, and Bonneville in Oregon came before it. It will not be the last. On the first visit, we came up the old gorge of the Columbia, riding in a procession behind Franklin D. Roosevelt, perhaps foremost among our builder Presidents. There from below, the great wall of concrete purst upon the sight. It was beginning to rise against the mighty river. It is an inspiring sight from the top of the dam— three-quarters of a mile across and 500 feet high, tall as the Washington monument in the national capital. On one side, you look upon Roosevelt lake which disappears around a bend but extends 151 miles to the Canadian border.

The dam created that lake. On this same side

| toward the eastern end of the bridge, you can see, far

REFLECTIONS . . . By Robert C. Ruark Mice and Horse Racing in Maryland

WASHINGTON, Oct. 7.—The case of the waltzing mice is closed, and everybody is happy, except the | mice and the jockeys and the trainers and the horses | and the owners. Bureaucracy has invaded the sport of suckers in Maryland, and it won't be long until you have to fill out a questionnaire and present your social security card before you get down a two-buck | bet.

Protect Nervous Horses

| THE HORSE PARK AT LAUREL opened the rac- | ing season.last week, with The Outrider leading the | horses and The Pied Piper, seated astride a large | rat, leading the mice. It is going to be a very tough season on mice, because of the new rules and regula- | tions governing horses with a fondness for a shot in the hip. After an epidemic of twitchy steeds, who charged home coked to the eyes, the Maryland racing commission has installed a special receiving barn for its bangtails, into which the horses are admitted two hours before race time. In the receiving quarters also is a family of underprivileged mice, into whose hides saliva from the horses is injected. If the mouse does a ground loop, suffers paralysis of the tail, and foams at the mouth, the ‘horse=is presumed guilty of the narcotic habit, a lamentable weakness, and is jerked from the race. If the mouse | merely grimaces and rubs his wound with a tiny paw,

|

i |

| | | is allowed to gallop home a bad fourth. . However, as one veteran rac: writer said, it seemed for a while that the betting public would spend the autumn season in the commission’s offices, wagering hunks of cheese on the mice. The commission first attempted to saddle the trainer ‘with full responsibility for the horses after they had been placed in the receiving barn. The trainers reared and kicked, allowing that once their horses had entered the commission's stalls, the train-

ers’ responsibility ended. The commission refused to accept the responsi-

TODAY IN EUROPE . . . By

which will ensure that who in the future “conspire to wage aggressive war

will be punished. This is an admirable idea, But it should not be overlooked that the main reason the Nazi leaders found themselves in the dock was not that they made the war, but that they lost it.

Reds Committed Similar’ Acts

clothing, food shortages—this situation at Tech is too small a thing to even warrant conversation, Class‘room activities of course should be governed by the school, but isn't it stretching a point too far by trying to rule their social lives too!

DAILY THOUGHT

(Take heed) lest thou 'ift up thine eyes unto heaven, and when “thou seest the sun, and the moon, and the stars, even all the Host of heaven, shouldest be driven to worship them, and serve them, which the Lord thy God hath divided unto all nations under the whole heaven. —Deuteron= omy 4:19. a

But who with filial confidence in- ~~ spired, é Can lift to Heaven an unpresump- | tuous eye, } et for a few years | And smilingly say, My le the way it isl" | - themeall ;

10-7

=Cowper,

Woe uy ®

Pt

Father made

FUTURE HISTORIANS ARE therefore more likely to record that the real significance of Nuernberg was that it set a precedent for the losers to be tried by the victors—and killed. Whether this will mate-

| rially advance the cause of ‘world civilization seems

open to doubt. ; The careful and discriminating judgments handed

| put at Nuernberg are proof of the seriousness and | dense of responsibility with which the tribunal devoted itself to its complicated and thankless task. No one can doubt that justice in the broadest sense has .been done. On the other hand, it is open to grave doubt whether it was good law. Granting the essential Jllegality of the whole basis of the trial, the proceedings were conducted with such dignity and fairness, and with such respect for the rules of evidence. that the accused showed quite plainly by their conduct that, in their hearts, they accepted the court's jurisdiction, The accused, like King Charles ‘1 of England, when tried by the triumphant Roundheads, might have refused to plead. Instead, they defended themselves with vigor. And | they showed, on repeated ‘occasions, their respect tor | the court, for the conduct of the trial, and for the | way in which’ Lord’ Justice Sir Geoffrey Lawrence | presided, as well-as for the way in

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the horse is regarded as a clean-living beast, and

German Heads Tried for Losing War

NEW YORK, Oct. 7.—The result of the Nuernberg trial is being widely hailed as establishing a precedent politicians and military leaders

bélow, the tunnels carved under the rock wall through which the waters of the river will be pumped up under the hills and over to form a new lake 26 miles long. Through a system of canals and irrigation ditches it will be spread over a million acres of now barren and unproductive land to the east. And, over the other side of the dam, you look down upon the waters as they fall, like a hurtling snow drift, into the gorge below, a man-made sheen of beauty. Heart of the great monster is underneath the dam. There the great turbines turned by the river create the electrical energy to turn wheels of old and new industries hundreds of miles away, and to pump water into the new lake for irrigating farms of the future. Underneath the dam is a4 great building as spacious as many of our big office buildings—miles and miles of tunnels on numerous floors leading in and out to a series of shiny, clean control rooms. Quiet men do their various jobs there. It takes only a few to handle this giant, now that the river has been brought under control after a dozen years.

New Industries Affected

POWER FROM GRAND COULEE is helping to create new industries for the Northwest, among them aluminum. It supplies power for the two large aluminum plants outside this city. There are three other plants in the state in this new- industry. The Northwest is coming into its own, and cheap power is the reason They have put the Columbia giant to work.

bility. The Horsemen's Benevolent Protective association, and the Jockeys’ Guild, Inc., threatened to boycott Maryland racing. - Everybody went around mut-' tering until last Monday, when the commission backed down and agreed to take full charge of the horses after they entered the clinic.

Then arose the question of “nervous” horses. The horse owners sort of snuck a fast one past the commission. They wangled an agreement that a nag which seemed unhappy and maladjusted in the receiving stalls could be placed in his home stall, under special guard. Racetrack cynics see” an epidemic of horses with coffee nerves, combat fatigue, and acute allergies to mice. Fifty guards have been hired, however, to protect possible candidates for nervous prostration. They stand watch over the fidgeting animals in their own stalls, to prevent some humanitarian from easing their tension with a shot of hop. Actually, most important step in protecting the racing public from itself has not yet been attempted. As the office horse expert points out, a horse, doped or undoped, cannot run any faster than he can run. Needling him full of nerve tonic does not increase his speed, but only makes him careless and bold. Until the racing commissions do something about giving jockeys mouse tests, they are plugging - the dikes of dishonest racing with cheesecloth. For real improvement of the breed, the jockeys should be subjected to lie detéctor tests after each race. :

More Novel Controls

FAILING THAT, restraining casts could be strapped to the jockeys’ elbows, to keep them from snatching at the reins. Better still, the horses could be guided by radio, as in the case of drone aircraft. That would remove the uncertain element of the jockey altogether. Best of all, they could stop all this foolishness, let

the horses be hopped up and the jockeys haul hard

to their heart's content. The public could go on losing its shirt, happy and uncomplicated, and it would be so much easier on the mice. :

Randolph Churchill

Maxwell Fyfe and thé other allied lawyers conducted the prosecution, Ohne unsatisfactory feature is the fact that the Russian judges should have found it necessary to

Whi On Sept. i¢ |

had “re

MONDA 2 =

i

Conference "End Wi Hope

By R. 1 United Pres PARIS, O Christian Sn _ today called, meeting of th Its purpose he told the a dangerous division of tl and western | Mr. Smuts began final p eration of tl Italy. The only m both te the 1 1946 Paris cc wag cheered speak and ag He said tl powers had ¢ by the Paris that the issue “be openly di before this c« | Asks N “Let this ¢ message of h despair,” he si He couched Three meetin; leadership m gether and = rest.” “The fear o two camps tr sues arising I myself do the parting ¢ the fear mu fear is .spre halted.” Each of the minutes, if it Italian treat) used only 15 allotted. Calis f Senator To attacked the troversial iss Trieste—“free - nation.” The commi. phases of the reach an agre government - 1 nally urged f{ A governmen! cratic princip Foreign Mi who has beer sultation witl returned “to fternoon.

MOTIVE DIVORC

DETROIT, troit police cover a motiv room slaying Tracy Rose, brunette divo Mrs. Rose's laundry roor building wher cal examinat been struck & heavy ins smeared foot] dry room doc Investigator checking the Rose was kill was no evide Detectives ing might ha prowler.

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which Sir David

dissent from so many of the verdicts, particularly from those which -sought to temper justice with mercy. Even more unpleasing was an agly fact underlying the whole trial—that so many of the charges preferred against the accused, in particular those against groups and organizations, could have been prought with equal, or greater, force against the Russians themselves, Count 1, the common plan or conspiracy clause, stated ‘that the defendants “planned, prepared, initiated and waged wars of aggression, which were also

wars in violation of international treaties.” But what Member: weré the Russian invasions of Finland, latvia, E Ritter wl Lithuania, Esthonia and Poland? Were these not " conspiracies to wage wars? Or were they merely By EMMA accidents? Times x The .Most | History Shows Blemish atehbishopeel - ANOTHER COUNT ACCUSED the German gov=- Indianapolis ernment and high command of deporting “able-bodied new work. citizens from occupied countries to Germany and He will be to other occupied countries for the purpose of slave of St. Louis labor.” The Russian deportations of Poles, Latvians OMOITOW .mo A group ‘of

Lithuanians and Esthonians, to say nothing of thei own peoples, make the German deportations look, like child's play. There are an unknown .number, not - less than ‘18,000,000 and perhaps as high as 45,000,000, of such victims in the Russian slave camps today. These disagreeable facts undoubtedly put a blemish fipon the integrity of the tribunal and, to. a large '

extent, maired the validity of the whole transaction.

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panied the ar private car a The Rt. Re gan and var clergy and la the archbishc and gladness. sorrow at see